Assign a point value to each level, and a total point value for the assessment

Identify the criteria for each level of quality within a characteristic/task

Create the rubric table – put the dimensions as rows and the levels as columns.

Step 1: Performance Objectives with the ABCD Model

"How to Write Clear Objectives" from Pennsylvania State University's Teaching and Learning https://ets.tlt.psu.edu/learningdesign/objectives/writingobjectives/
Objectives need to be based on specific, observable behavior (e.g., not “learn” and “understand” but “create” or “list”).
A = Audience (who is being evaluated?)
B = Behavior (observable!)
C = Condition (under what conditions will the behavior occur?)
D = Degree (how much/many, how fast, how accurately, etc. – what makes it good?) – also called criteria

Examples of Well-Written Objectives – from PSU

Below are some example objectives which include Audience (A), Behavior (B), Condition (C), and Degree of Mastery (D). Note that many objectives actually put the condition first.

Cognitive (application level) -"Given a sentence written in the past or present tense, the student will be able to re-write the sentence in future tense with no errors in tense or tense contradiction (i.e., I will see her yesterday.)."Affective - "Given the opportunity to work in groups, the student will demonstrate an positive increase in attitude towards cooperation, as measured by a survey." Cognitive (comprehension level) -"Given examples and non-examples of constructivist activities in a college classroom, the student will be able to accurately identify the constructivist examples and explain why each example is or isn't a constructivist activity in 20 words or less."

Participants in this webinar (Audience), after listening carefully and participating actively in group work (Condition), will create rubrics (Behavior) that will contain at least three rows for characteristics and at least three columns for levels (Degree).

Step 2: Identify the characteristics/tasks comprising the performance

Make sure you focus on enough but not too many. Try to keep the rubric to one or two pages at most.

Step 3: Identify the potential levels of quality

More levels is a lot more work. Have enough, but no more.

Three levels: weak, average, very good (9 cells with 3 characteristics)

Four levels: very weak, almost satisfactory, satisfactory, excellent (12 cells with 3 characteristics)

Five levels: very weak, weak, average, very good, excellent (15 cells with 3 characteristics – and you often have more than 3. That’s a lot of writing).

Step 4: Assign a point value to each level, and a total point value for the assessment.

Sample calculation – if you have 4 points in 5 characteristics, the total can be 20 (or 15, if one of the levels is 0). Don't let the math stop you!

Step 5: Identify the criteria for each level of quality within a characteristic/task.

Start with what makes something excellent. How would a student get the maximum number of points for each characteristic/task? Be as complete as possible in thinking about this.

Now, look at the weakest. What would a very weak characteristic/task look like?

Finally, look at the middle areas. What is missing in each characteristic/task?

Describe each of the levels carefully and clearly, so that students can understand what you want.

Step 6: Create the rubric table.

Tables in Word work well for creating templates for rubrics.
Sample table with three characteristics, and three points.
Course name:
Assignment:
Date:

Weak (1 point)

Average (2 points)

Very Good (3 points)

Content (interesting ideas, examples)

No examples that explain why you want to learn English.

At least one example that explains why you want to learn English.

At least two examples that explain why you want to learn English.

Grammar

Several mistakes that make it hard to understand your meaning.

1 or 2 small mistakes, but the reader can understand your meaning.

No mistakes in what we have studied so far (simple present and simple past).

Mechanics

Several mistakes that make it hard to understand your meaning.

1 or 2 small mistakes, but the reader can understand your meaning

No mistakes in what we have studied so far (capitalization, punctuation, common spelling words).